After expending every last ounce of energy on the field, Elliot Dixon experienced mixed emotions while watching the Highlanders close out their maiden Super Rugby title.
"It was fun to watch that [from the bench]," said the man of the match. "But the last two minutes were the longest two minutes of my life."
With the level of trust the Highlanders' forwards clearly have in one another, Dixon needn't have worried. All season they've been under-rated, hearing labels like 'unheralded' and having their achievements affixed with a disclaimer about their lack of All Blacks, compliments only in the back-handed sense.
And all season they've trumped pack after pack, particularly in the playoffs. First it was a fearsome Chiefs outfit featuring the world player of the year, then a Waratahs unit with a full eight internationals, and tonight a Hurricanes group who had earned plaudits for their vast improvements.
The Highlanders' forwards, however, simply swatted aside any pre-conceived notions and went about laying the platform for win after win, muscling up at the breakdown, sparking rapid transitions from turnover ball and tackling themselves to a stand still.